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Predictors of resistant hypertension in an unselected sample of an adult male population in Italy

Authors :
Eduardo Farinaro
Francesco P. Cappuccio
Renato Ippolito
Gian Paolo Rossi
Antonella Venezia
Antonio Barbato
Ferruccio Galletti
Roberto Iacone
Pasquale Strazzullo
Barbato, Antonio
Galletti, Ferruccio
Iacone, Roberto
Cappuccio, Fp
Rossi, Giovanni
Ippolito, Renato
Venezia, A
Farinaro, Eduardo
Strazzullo, Pasquale
Source :
Internal and Emergency Medicine. 7:343-351
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2011.

Abstract

Prevalence, incidence and predictors of resistant hypertension (RH), (defined as blood pressure persistently above goal in spite of the concurrent use of three antihypertensive agents of different classes) in the general population remain largely unknown. A complete database including anthropometric and biochemical data was collected in 1994-1995 (baseline examination) in 1,019 participants (mean age 51.8, range: 25-79 years) and again in 2002-2004 in 794 male participants of the Olivetti Heart Study (OHS) in southern Italy. The incidence of RH over the average follow-up time of 7.9 years was 4.8% (38/794) in the whole study population and 10.1% (31/307) among hypertensive participants. Basal blood pressure (systolic, diastolic or pulse pressure), cholesterol and urinary albumin/creatinine ratio (ACR) significantly predicted the risk of developing RH using a logistic regression model that also included age as covariates. If in the same model we added basal pharmacological treatment, the fractional excretion of sodium (FENa) also became a statistically significant predictor, and this last model explained nearly 25% of the risk of developing RH. In this unselected sample of an adult male population, ACR (an early marker of organ damage), an elevated FENa (a proxy for dietary sodium intake), cholesterol and a higher basal blood pressure level were independent predictors of RH.

Details

ISSN :
19709366 and 18280447
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Internal and Emergency Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....76e1423a56060ca902f2d58c304a97e9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11739-011-0554-2